Delilah
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For other uses, see Delilah (disambiguation).
Delilah or Dlila (דְּלִילָה, Standard Hebrew meaning "[One who] weakened or uprooted or impoverished" from the root dal meaning "weak or poor". Also: Dəlila, Tiberian Hebrew Dəlîlāh; Arabic Dalilah), was the "woman in the valley of Sorek" whom Samson loved, and was his downfall, in the Hebrew Bible Book of Judges (Chapter 16).
Delilah was approached by the Philistines, the enemies of Israel, to discover the secret of Samson's strength. Three times she asked Samson for the secret of his strength and three times he gave her a false answer. On the fourth occasion he gave her the true reason (that he did not cut his hair in fulfillment of a vow to God) and Delilah betrayed him to his enemies.
Some consider that one of the false secrets given by Samson, that his strength would leave him if his hair was woven into a cloth, is reminiscent of arcane woman's magic of the art of weaving that is also inherent in the myths of Penelope, Circe, Arachne.
"Sorek" or "soreq" is only specifically identified as being a place in the Samson story. Jerome mentions a "Capharsorec" which was near Saraa. Modern Israel has a Soreq Valley and even a Sorek Vineyard (since 1994/5) producing a Merlot. Soreq however is the grapevine in Genesis 49:11, Isaiah 5:2, and Jeremiah 2:21. Samson had been dedicated from the womb as a Nazarite, who was forbidden to touch wine or cut his hair. Delilah may be a "vine-woman" (compare the mythic Greek name Oenone), personifying the womanly temptations of the vine that would betray his Nazarite dedication..
John Milton personified her as the misguided and foolish but sympathetic temptress, much like his view of Eve, in his 1671 work Samson Agonistes. Delilah has become the eponym of a "Delilah", a treacherous and cunning femme fatale (as in Tom Jones' 1968 song).
[edit] Film and Television
- Delilah has been portrayed on film and television by among others Hedy Lamarr, Rosalba Neri, Elizabeth Hurley and Belinda Bauer. She was also mentioned in a song in The Phantom of the Opera and in the song Someday We'll Know by the New Radicals.
- There is a song by the Dresden Dolls called "Delilah", she's referred to as 'a sucker for the ones who use her'.
[edit] External links
- Hebrew concordance with Strong's Dictionary: '"soreq"
- International Standard Bible Encyclopedia: "Sorek, Valley of"; asserting connections with specific sites